Former
Tallahassee mayor and Florida gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum
is the target of a federal investigation as other issues regarding
the denial of voting rights and the possible theft of an election in
the Sunshine State receive scant attention.
Gillum,
who lost by a close race against Ron DeSantis last year, is the
target of an investigation, and his campaign was issued a federal
grand jury subpoena,
as the Tampa Bay Times reported. Although little has been reported,
the subpoena issued in the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Florida in Tallahassee demanded information regarding
Gillum’s campaign and political committee; investor and
philanthropist Donald Sussman, one of his big donors who gave $1.5
million to the Gillum campaign, and two charities with which Gillum
is affiliated — Schott Foundation for Public Education, a
nonprofit racial and economic justice organization, and Opportunity
to Learn Action Fund. The subpoena, which requested documents dating
back to 2015, requested delivery of the information by May 7.
During
his campaign for governor, Gillum insisted he was not an FBI target
and that he ran an “open and honest campaign.” Barry
Richard, Gillum’s attorney, said the campaign is complying with
the subpoena, but believes this latest effort is another political
hit job in an attempt to discredit his client.
“He
ran a very positive race, and obviously a lot of people in this state
thought a great deal of him and nationally,” said Richard. “And
almost the entire time since he’s had to defend himself from
investigations that were started because of people who want to
undermine him.” Richard also said the subpoena could be related
to an investigation into a misreporting
or misuse
of campaign funds. The subpoena is reportedly unrelated to an FBI
investigation into corruption in Tallahassee. In April, Gillum
reached a plea agreement in which he paid a $5,000 fine for allegedly
accepting gifts — including a ticket to the Broadway show
“Hamilton” — from an undercover FBI agent.
As
Gillum is apparently being investigated for the 2018 campaign in
which he did not prevail, his opponent, Gov. DeSantis, recently
promised to sign a bill making it more difficult for people with a
felony record from voting. Coming on the heels of the November 2018
victory of Amendment 4 — in which 65 percent of Floridians
voted to restore voting rights to ex-felons except for those
convicted of murder or a sex crime — Republicans in the state
legislature passed SB 7066, a measure requiring the formerly
incarcerated to pay fines, fees, restitution and all financial
obligations before their voting rights are restored. Critics note the
law is an obstacle to prevent tens of thousands people from voting,
and amounts to a poll tax. This in a state with a long history of
racist, Jim Crow-style voter suppression measures such as strict
voter ID requirements, and voter suppression tactics in the most
recent 2018 election.
Nevertheless,
DeSantis insisted the state Legislature’s newly enumerated
restrictions would be carrying out the people’s intent, saying
the new bill will implement the Amendment 4 voters passed “as
it’s written.” DeSantis has not yet signed SB 7066.
During
the gubernatorial campaign, DeSantis was known for racism and
Islamophobia, including defending the Three-Fifths Compromise that
counted Black people as three-fifths of a person in the Constitution
for the purposes of Congressional representation. DeSantis falsely
claimed the measure helped anti-slavery states, when in reality it
helped the slaveholding states by giving them additional
representation in Congress as they denied rights to their enslaved
population. DeSantis also compared Black Lives Matter to ISIS, and
urged Florida voters not to “monkey this up” by electing
his opponent Gillum.
DeSantis
also announced in May that he had met with the FBI and Department of
Homeland Security, and that Russian hackers had successfully
infiltrated the voting systems of two Florida counties in the 2016
election. The Florida governor refused to disclose which counties,
based on a nondisclosure agreement he says he had signed with the
FBI, and claimed the “intrusion” did not involve a
manipulation of voter data and did not impact voting results. Sen.
Marco Rubio of Florida had previously said that Russians had hacked
into a Florida election system and were “in a position”
to alter voter data.
While
the details of his investigation are unknown, the focus on Gillum
serves as a reminder of the history of the relationship between the
federal government and the Black community. The FBI has a long
history of targeting Black leaders and the Civil Rights and Black
Power movement through its COINTELPRO
program,
which was intended to prevent the rise of a Black messiah. That
federal infiltration and disruption of Black America has been
upgraded in recent times to include surveillance of Black
Lives Matter
and a crackdown on so-called “Black
Identity Extremists,”
although such a designation and concept were manufactured by the FBI.
In
addition, the federal government has a track record of investigating
and disproportionately targeting Black elected officials for alleged
wrongdoing. Some examples include former U.S. Reps. Chaka Fattah,
Jesse Jackson Jr. and Bill Jefferson, and former Detroit mayor Kwame
Kilpatrick. Kilpatrick was handed a 28-year sentence for tax evasion,
mail fraud, racketeering, extortion and other financial crimes he
committed while in office.
Meanwhile,
a number of government officials in the Trump administration have not
faced prosecution for their corruption and violations of the law,
such Attorney General William Barr, who has failed to comply with a
Congressional subpoena and a court
order.
Former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke resigned in light of numerous
investigations into his misconduct while in office. Former EPA
Administrator Scott Pruitt, among other things, spent over $168,000
on air travel in one year, and rented a townhouse room from an energy
industry lobbyist for $50 a night. Short-lived former Health and
Human Services Secretary Tom Price violated federal travel
requirements and wasted $341,000 on private jets, while Commerce
Secretary Wilbur Ross has failed to divest millions of dollars in
investments to resolve conflicts of interest, including ownership in
Chinese and Russian firms, and reportedly “could rank among the
biggest grifters in American history.” Most of all, Donald
Trump has been named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the criminal
case of his former attorney Michael Cohen, who is serving a
three-year sentence for tax evasion, lying to Congress and breaking
campaign finance laws.
Meanwhile,
if Gillum engaged in wrongdoing, that case should be adjudicated.
However, the subpoena comes as more serious issues are arising in
Florida, as the state chooses to enact a poll tax on the formerly
incarcerated and violate their voting rights, and the 2016 Florida
election results are cast in doubt. Yet, the spotlight is on the
nearly triumphant campaign of a Black former elected official with
national aspirations — a reminder that the government always
seems to go after Black politicians harder than white ones.
This
commentary was originally published by AtlantaBlackStar.com
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